UK judge: Putin 'probably approved' killing of ex-KGB agent
Marina Litvinenko, widow of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, places her arm around her son Anatoly during a press conference in London, Thursday, Jan. 21, 2016. Judge Robert Owen said Thursday he is certain that Litvinenko was given tea laced with a fatal dose of polonium-210 at a London hotel in November 2006. He says there is a "strong probability" that the FSB directed the killing and the operation was "probably approved" by Russian President Vladimir Putin. |
LONDON
(AP) -- Almost a decade after former KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko
lay dying in a London hospital bed, a British judge has concluded who
poisoned him: two Russian men, acting at the behest of Russia's security
services, probably with approval from President Vladimir Putin.
That
finding prompted sharp exchanges Thursday between London and Moscow,
and a diplomatic dilemma for both countries. With Russia and the West
inching closer together after years of strain, neither side wants a new
feud - even over a state-sanctioned murder on British soil.
Judge
Robert Owen, who led the public inquiry into the killing, said he was
certain that two Russians with links to the security services had given
Litvinenko green tea containing a fatal dose of radioactive polonium-210
during a meeting at a London hotel. He said there was a "strong
probability" that Russia's FSB, the successor to the Soviet Union's KGB
spy agency, directed the killing and that the operation was "probably
approved" by Putin, then as now the president of Russia.
Before
he died, Litvinenko accused Putin of ordering his killing, but Owen's
report is the first public official statement linking the Russian
president to the crime, and it sent a chilling jolt through U.K.-Russia
relations.
British Prime Minister David
Cameron said the evidence in the report of "state-sponsored" killing was
"absolutely appalling." Britain summoned the Russian ambassador for a
dressing-down and imposed an asset freeze on the two main suspects:
Andrei Lugovoi, now a Russian lawmaker, and Dmitry Kovtun.
Home
Secretary Theresa May said the involvement of the Russian state was "a
blatant and unacceptable breach of the most fundamental tenets of
international law and of civilized behavior."
Moscow
has always strongly denied being involved in Litvinenko's death and
accused Britain of conducting a secretive and politically motivated
inquiry.
Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told
reporters that the "quasi-investigation" would "further poison the
atmosphere of our bilateral relations."
He said the report "cannot be accepted by us as a verdict."
Russian
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zhakarova said the British inquiry
was neither public nor transparent, saying it had turned into a "shadow
puppet theater."
"There was one goal from the beginning: slander Russia and slander its officials," she told reporters in Moscow.
Litvinenko
fled to Britain in 2000 and became a critic of Russia's security
services and of Putin, whom he accused of links to organized crime and
other alleged transgressions including pedophilia, Owen said in the
report. He was a very vocal annoyance, feeding inside information about
Russia's secrets to Western intelligence services, and - the judge said -
was widely regarded within the FSB as a traitor.
"There
were powerful motives for organizations and individuals within the
Russian state to take action against Mr. Litvinenko, including killing
him," Owen wrote in the 326-page report.
The
judge said the case for Russian state involvement was circumstantial but
strong. Owen said Litvinenko had "personally targeted President Putin
himself with highly personal public criticism," allied himself with
Putin's opponents and was believed to be working for British
intelligence.
Litvinenko had co-written a book
in which he blamed former FSB superiors of carrying out bombings of
Russian apartment buildings in 1999 that were blamed on Chechen
militants. He also accused Putin of being behind the 2006 contract-style
slaying of Anna Politkovskaya, a journalist who exposed human rights
abuses in Chechnya.
Owen said the method of
killing, with radioactive poison, fit with the deaths of several other
opponents of Putin and his government, and noted that Putin had
"supported and protected" Lugovoi since the killing, even awarding him a
medal for service to the nation.
"I am sure
that Mr. Lugovoi and Mr. Kovtun placed the polonium-210 in the teapot at
the Pine Bar on 1 November 2006," he wrote - probably under the
direction of the FSB.
He said the operation to
kill Litvinenko was "probably" approved by then-FSB head Nikolai
Patrushev, now head of Putin's security council. He said it was "likely"
the FSB chief would have sought Putin's approval for an operation to
kill Litvinenko.
Marina Litvinenko, the spy's
widow, said she was "very pleased that the words my husband spoke on his
deathbed when he accused Mr. Putin have been proved by an English
court."
She urged Cameron to expel Russian
intelligence agents operating in Britain and impose economic sanctions
and travel bans on Putin and other officials linked to what her lawyer,
Ben Emmerson, called "a mini-act of nuclear terrorism on the streets of
London."
"It's unthinkable that the prime
minister would do nothing in the face of the damning findings," Marina
Litvinenko told reporters.
Britain's scope for strong action is limited, however.
U.K.-Russian
relations have remained chilly since the killing of Litvinenko, who was
granted British citizenship shortly before his death, and worsened with
Russia's involvement in the separatist fighting in Ukraine. But the
inquiry's report comes as the two countries are cautiously trying to
work together against the Islamic State group in Syria, and neither
wants a major new rift.
May, the home
secretary, announced asset freezes against Lugovoi and Kovtun, and said
Interpol had issued notices calling for their arrest if they traveled
abroad. Russia refuses to extradite them.
Lugovoi
is now a member of the Russian parliament, which means he is immune
from prosecution in his country. In an interview with The Associated
Press, he called the British investigation a "spectacle."
"I
think that - yet again - Great Britain has shown that anything that
involves their political interests, they'll make a top priority," he
said.
Lugovoi also claimed he would have liked
to testify at the inquiry but "was not allowed." The judge said both
Lugovoi and Kovtun declined to give evidence.
Kovtun,
now described as a businessman, told the Tass news agency that the
conclusions were based on "false evidence" presented in closed hearings.
Political
figures in Russia have cast the political inquiry as politically driven
by a hostile West, and have highlighted the fact that parts were held
in private because Britain was unwilling to disclose intelligence
material.
Vyacheslav Nikonov, a political
analyst close to the Kremlin, called the case "a black box into which no
one was allowed to look, except for the judge," and claimed "decisions
were made for purely political reasons."
Dmitry
Oreshkin, an opposition-minded Russian political analyst, said the
findings meant "the relationship with the West will systematically get
worse" - something that suited Putin's interests.
Owen,
a retired High Court judge appointed by the government to head the
inquiry, heard from dozens of witnesses during months of public hearings
last year and also saw secret British intelligence evidence.
In
his report, the judge laid out the overwhelming scientific evidence
against Lugovoi and Kovtun, including a trail of radiation that
stretched from the hotel teapot to the sink in Kovtun's room and even to
Emirates Stadium, the home of the Arsenal soccer team where Lugovoi
attended a game.
Litvinenko died after three
agonizing weeks in which his hair fell out, he vomited blood and his
organs failed.
A urine test conducted by a doctor on a hunch shortly
before Litvinenko's death revealed the presence of polonium-210, an
isotope that is deadly if ingested in tiny quantities.
He
lapsed into unconsciousness Nov. 22, after telling his wife he loved
her and died of heart failure the next day. His body was so radioactive
that he was buried in a lead-lined coffin in London's Highgate Cemetery.